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=========================== ==== quotatool ==== =========================== Quick Start =========== ./configure make sudo make install Usage ===== quotatool { -u uid | -g gid } [ options ... ] filesystem quotatool { -u uid | -g gid } -t time { -i | -b } filesystem quotatool { -u uid | -g gid } -r filesystem quotatool { -u uid | -g gid } -d filesystem The actual arguments accepted depends on your system. Solaris, for example, doesn't support group quotas, so the -g option is useless. If your getopt() doesn't support optional arguments, then you always need to pass an argument to -u and -g. Arguments and Options ===================== -u uid username or uid. -g gid groupname or gid. See examples below how to handle non-existent uid/gid -b set block limits -i set inode limits -q n set soft limit to n blocks/inodes -l n set hard limit to n blocks/inodes quotatool accepts the units Kb, Mb, Gb, Tb, bytes and blocks to modify limit arguments. Use +/- to raise/lower quota by the specified amount. See examples below. -R Raise only - makes sure you don't accidentally lower quotas for a user/group -t time set global grace period to time. The time parameter consists of an optional '+' or '-' modifier, a number, and one of: 'sec', 'min', 'hour', 'day', 'week', and 'month'. If a +/- modifier is present, the current quota will be increased/reduced by the amount specified -r restart grace period for uid or gid -h print a usage message -v verbose mode -- print status messages during execution use this twice for even more information -n do everything except set the quota. useful with -v to see what is supposed to happen -V show version filesystem is either device name (eg /dev/sda1) or mountpoint (eg /home) Examples ======== Set soft block limit to 800Mb, hard block limit to 1Gb for user mpg4 on /home: quotatool -u mpg4 -b -q 500M -l 1G /home Raise soft block limit by 100M for non-existent gid 12345 on /dev/loop3: quotatool -g :12345 -b -q +100M /dev/loop3 Set hard inode limit to 2000 for user johan on /var: quotatool -u johan -i -l 2000 /var Set the global block grace period to one week on /home: quotatool -u -b -t "1 week" /home Restart inode grace period for user johan on root filesystem: quotatool -u johan -i -r / Notes ===== * Grace periods are set on a "global per quotatype and filesystem" basis only. Each quotatype (usrquota / grpquota) on each filesystem has two grace periods - one for block limits and one for inode limits. It is not possible to set different grace periods for users on the same filesystem. * Using non-existent uids/gids like ":12345" can be useful when configuring quotas on a mounted filesystem which is a separate system in it self, like when preparing an install image or repairing a filesystem from another installation. * Limit arguments can be specified in several ways, these are all equivalent: 1M 1m 1Mb 1 "Mb" * Use +/- to raise/lower quotas relative to current limits * Use -v (or -v -v) to see verbose/debug info when running commands Platforms and Filesystems ========================= quotatool currently builds and works well on: -- Linux -- Both old and new quota formats. ext2, ext3, ext4, ReiserFS and XFS supported -- Solaris -- -- AIX -- Missing your favorite *nix OS? Check the ChangeLog for the latest additions, or port it yourself and send us a patch!